Numéro
J. Phys. II France
Volume 7, Numéro 9, September 1997
Page(s) 1185 - 1204
DOI https://doi.org/10.1051/jp2:1997180
DOI: 10.1051/jp2:1997180
J. Phys. II France 7 (1997) 1185-1204

Late Stages of the "Pearling" Instability in Lipid Bilayers

J.L. Coveas1, S.T. Milner2 and W.B. Russel1

1  Department of Chemical Engineering, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA
2  Exxon Research & Engineering, Route 22 East, Annandale, NJ 08801, USA

(Received 1 October 1996, revised 7 April 1997, accepted 29 May 1997)

Abstract
Applying laser tweezers to cylindrical vesicles of lipid bilayers produces an instability which propagates down the vesicle leaving behind it a peristaltic state, which appears under the microscope as pearls on a string. We investigate the late stages of this "pearling" instability, where the pearls are observed to drift slowly towards the laser trap (the spot at which the tweezers are applied, into which the surfactant is drawn) where they jam up. We model the hydrodynamics of the drifting pearls as a combination of translation of the string of pearls, and "slipping" of the bilayer skin over the pearls, to relate the speed of the pearls to the underlying flux of surfactant into the trap. We find that the pearl drift is slower than the skin-slip speed by a factor of order a/R where a is the radius of the tethers connecting the pearls, and R is the pearl radius.



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